U.S.-backed Syrian Kurdish group 'ready to talk to Damascus'

U.S.-backed Syrian Kurdish group 'ready to talk to Damascus'

BEIRUT - The Associated Press
U.S.-backed Syrian Kurdish group ready to talk to Damascus

Syrian Democratic Council (SDC), the U.S.-backed Syrian Kurdish party in control of northeastern Syria, is prepared to hold talks with the Syrian government over the future of the area, senior Kurdish officials said on June 6.

A Damascus-based political group called the "Syrian Democratic Front," which is seen as close to the government, visited the Kurdish-led administration to "start a dialogue" with the government, said Ilham Ahmed, who co-chairs the U.S-backed SDC in northeast Syria.

The proposition comes days after Turkey and the United States agreed on a "roadmap" to resolve a dispute over the northern Syrian town of Manbij, which is controlled by the U.S.-backed Kurdish fighters, Washington’s main ally in Syria.

"The aim would ... be to develop a Syrian-Syrian solution and close the door on conflicts and wars," said Aldar Khalil, a senior Kurdish official.

Ahmed suggested time may be ripe for dialogue with the Syrian government, which has opposed the Turkey-U.S. deal on Manbij. The Kurdish-led administration is under pressure to clarify its relationship with Damascus after U.S. President Donald Trump vowed to withdraw U.S. troops from eastern Syria.

"We are seeking ... a vision that ends the war," said Ahmed. "We want to secure our (self-administration) project and the Americans care for that too."

There was no immediate response from Damascus to the Kurdish comments. A previous round of talks between the Syrian Kurds and Damascus, sponsored by Russia, yielded no results.

Syrian President Bashar Assad’s government has oscillated between reaching out to the Kurds and lashing out at them for collaborating with the Americans. Last year, the Syrian foreign minister said self-administration for the Kurds is "negotiable." Damascus has also sharply criticized a Turkey-backed offensive against a Syrian Kurdish enclave in northwestern Syria, and left roads open for the movement of aid and people out of the Kurdish enclave.

Meanwhile, Turkey has been pushing Washington to get Syrian Kurdish forces out of the town of Manbij and across the Euphrates River to its eastern bank. Ankara sees the Syrian Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) and its political body as an extension of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) which the U.S. and EU also consider as a terror network.

On June 6, Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yıldırım said with the Manbij deal, Ankara would have successfully "completely eliminated terror" from a 250 kilometer-long (155 miles) border area stretching from west of the Euphrates all the way to the Mediterranean.

The roadmap envisions joint Turkish-U.S. patrols around Manbij after the Kurdish forces withdraw from the town. But the deal, which could ease tensions between the NATO allies, is likely to force a realignment of troops along the volatile Syria-Turkey frontier and shrink the area controlled currently by the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, backed by the U.S.

A Kurdish official in Manbij, Shervan Darwish, confirmed that some group members will begin withdrawing from the town but did not mention any changes to the local military council. Turkish officials said a new council would be set up as part of the deal, within six months.

The U.S. and Turkey have differed over their description of what the Manbij deal entails and how it would be carried out, illustrating its fragility.

Khalil, the senior Kurdish official, said his party is ready to send a delegation to "test the waters" to see whether Assad’s government is ready to accept an autonomous Kurdish area in the northeast.

"If the result is peace and stability, then it is in the interest of all," Khalil said in a series of messages on a social media application.


Afrin, US,